Pollastri Susanna, Tsonev Tsonko, Loreto Francesco
The National Research Council of Italy (CNR), Department of Biology, Agriculture and Food Sciences, Institute for Plant Protection, Via Madonna del Piano 10, 50019 Sesto Fiorentino (Florence), Italy.
J Exp Bot. 2014 Apr;65(6):1565-70. doi: 10.1093/jxb/eru033.
Isoprene-emitting plants are better protected against thermal and oxidative stresses. Isoprene may strengthen membranes avoiding their denaturation and may quench reactive oxygen and nitrogen species, achieving a similar protective effect. The physiological role of isoprene in unstressed plants, up to now, is not understood. It is shown here, by monitoring the non-photochemical quenching (NPQ) of chlorophyll fluorescence of leaves with chemically or genetically altered isoprene biosynthesis, that chloroplasts of isoprene-emitting leaves dissipate less energy as heat than chloroplasts of non-emitting leaves, when exposed to physiologically high temperatures (28-37 °C) that do not impair the photosynthetic apparatus. The effect was especially remarkable at foliar temperatures between 30 °C and 35 °C, at which isoprene emission is maximized and NPQ is quenched by about 20%. Isoprene may also allow better stability of photosynthetic membranes and a more efficient electron transfer through PSII at physiological temperatures, explaining most of the NPQ reduction and the slightly higher photochemical quenching that was also observed in isoprene-emitting leaves. The possibility that isoprene emission helps in removing thermal energy at the thylakoid level is also put forward, although such an effect was calculated to be minimal. These experiments expand current evidence that isoprene is an important trait against thermal and oxidative stresses and also explains why plants invest resources in isoprene under unstressed conditions. By improving PSII efficiency and reducing the need for heat dissipation in photosynthetic membranes, isoprene emitters are best fitted to physiologically high temperatures and will have an evolutionary advantage when adapting to a warming climate.
释放异戊二烯的植物能更好地抵御热胁迫和氧化胁迫。异戊二烯可能会强化细胞膜以避免其变性,还可能淬灭活性氧和氮物种,从而达到类似的保护效果。到目前为止,异戊二烯在未受胁迫植物中的生理作用尚不清楚。通过监测化学或基因改变异戊二烯生物合成的叶片叶绿素荧光的非光化学猝灭(NPQ),结果表明,当暴露于不损害光合机构的生理高温(28 - 37°C)时,释放异戊二烯的叶片的叶绿体以热能形式耗散的能量比不释放异戊二烯的叶片的叶绿体少。在叶片温度为30°C至35°C之间时,这种效应尤为显著,此时异戊二烯的释放量最大,NPQ降低约20%。异戊二烯还可能使光合膜在生理温度下具有更好的稳定性,并使通过PSII的电子传递更有效,这解释了在释放异戊二烯的叶片中观察到的大部分NPQ降低以及稍高的光化学猝灭现象。尽管计算得出这种效应很小,但也提出了异戊二烯释放有助于在类囊体水平去除热能的可能性。这些实验扩展了当前的证据,即异戊二烯是抵御热胁迫和氧化胁迫的重要特性,也解释了为什么植物在未受胁迫的条件下会投入资源用于异戊二烯的合成。通过提高PSII效率并减少光合膜中散热的需求,释放异戊二烯的植物最适合生理高温,并且在适应气候变暖时将具有进化优势。